I'm curious as to who is in the bullpen working with the pitchers as they warm up. My coaching experience peaked at the high school level and was 15+ years ago, but it seems like 1) pitchers are not mentally prepared to go into a game and 2) mechanics are not being given the attention they need (flying open, dragging arm, etc.). These are things that, if simply brought to attention early in the bullpen session, can be corrected. ST is in the dugout for games, you have limited mound visits for catchers to notice and correct. This is what separates pitchers from throwers.
Im sure prior to the gsme Thib is in the pen. Obviously he isnt during the game. Back when Tony was coaching, he had coach domingue in the pen during the games. Now i see Domingue is in dugout during games. So to answer your question im not sure if there is anyone.
Im sure prior to the gsme Thib is in the pen. Obviously he isnt during the game. Back when Tony was coaching, he had coach domingue in the pen during the games. Now i see Domingue is in dugout during games. So to answer your question im not sure if there is anyone.
I'm usually there 30 minutes before gametime and have never seen him coming from down the 3rd baseline and he walks out of the dugout for the national anthem. Not saying 100% he's never in the bullpen, but it doesn't look like it.
Might not be a popular opinion, but am I the only one that thinks the “water hose boys” thing feels forced?
I really only see the Cajuns Barstool account pushing it the most. Every team has their own identity every season, but I do like that the barebones foundation of this program is finding those "water hose" archetypes. Especially in the NIL era.
I really only see the Cajuns Barstool account pushing it the most. Every team has their own identity every season, but I do like that the barebones foundation of this program is finding those "water hose" archetypes. Especially in the NIL era.